The amount I was transferred was not large. Let me explain that I first swiped my card for a transaction in the morning. That night, I bore the full loss of the forced liquidation, which may have driven me crazy, but these four transactions were the last recorded trades that happened right before my eyes... Normally, a user transfer takes 3 to 5 minutes... How did the system review four transactions in less than 1 second?

Many people seeing me share about Binance being hacked, being liquidated, and filing reports with no results may think:

It's just an exchange event, why were you hit so hard?

In fact, what really overwhelmed me was not a single event, but rather a 'double whammy':

  1. On one side, there was an incident with the Binance account, and the funds evaporated;

  2. On the other side, I was at Starmaker (SM), where due to policy changes and malicious reporting, I was directly banned.

In SM, it wasn't just "singing for fun"

  • I am using the identity of a live streamer,

  • With a set designed by myself profit model to do:

    • Having regular customers who come to listen to music and interact,

    • Having arrangements with currency exchanges and funding,

    • Gradually building a small system where I can "sing and support my family".

Later, the platform changed its policies, and on top of that, I was maliciously reported and banned:

  • Room, fans, trust, all returned to zero overnight;

  • The originally arranged client funding flow was also disrupted;

  • Because there was an incident on Binance, the funding chain was broken, causing the clients' money on the currency exchange side to also be unreachable.

  • Simply put:

  • Binance 10/10 reporting + being hacked a week later

  • SM destroyed the profit model, cash flow, and trust that I built up as a live streamer;

  • The two sides are interconnected, ultimately resulting in:

    • Problems upstream;

    • The operating funds in the middle were cut off,

    • The cash flow from downstream clients could not connect either,

    • All the pressure fell back on me alone.

So, when I now run to the chain, run to Giveth / GIV, to do a "self-rescue + charity experiment",
I'm not just selling my misfortunes for one Binance incident, but rather trying to convey:

  • Exchange risks,

  • Changes in platform policies,

  • Malicious reporting and account bans,

  • The currency exchange funding chain broke,
    This whole chain reaction,recorded with real cases.

I know that to outsiders, these are just a few lines of text, a few images,
but for me, that is

  • Lost my account,

  • Lost my identity,

  • Lost my income model,

  • and had to bear the pressure from clients and the distrust from family during this phase of life.

That's why I chose to transparently write everything on the chain,
and not pretend that nothing happened, continuing to "repackage myself" on the next platform.

If you've made it this far, I hope you understand:

I don't just have one Binance incident, but a whole system that has been chain-reacted and exploded,
which is already a very important support for me now.

Actually, at that moment I realized I had told customer service about the missed best timing due to the back-and-forth..
but they said it was my personal issue and they wouldn't take responsibility, suggesting I report to the police

#GIV #WEB3 #自救 #被盜 #黑天鵝
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